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Land use in the lake states region: An analysis of past trends and projections of future changes

Author: Mauldin, Thomas E.; Plantinga, Andrew J.; Alig, Ralph J.
Date: 1999
Periodical: Research Paper PNW-RP-519. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station
Abstract: This paper presents the historic trends and future projections of forest, farm, and urban land uses for the Lake States of Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. Since the 1950s, forest and farm land have been decreasing, and urban and other land use: have been increasing throughout the Lake States. Forest, crop, and pasture land has decreased in the region by 3.2, 5.4, and 4.0 million acres, respectively, whereas urban and other land uses have increased by 2.1 and 10.3 million acres, respectively. Then decreases and increases were most pronounced during the 1950s and 1980s. Land rents and land quality were used to make projections of the distribution of Wisconsin' future land uses. In Michigan and Minnesota, forest and farm land use projections were based on the extrapolation of historic trends, and urban land use projections were adopted from Wisconsin's econometric projections; land rents and land quality were not used for all projections because of insufficient data. The projections of land uses through 2050 are consistent with historic trends-forest and agricultural lands will decline, and urban and other land uses will increase. Timberland is projected to be reduced by 13 percent in Wisconsin, 11 percent in Michigan, and 10 percent in Minnesota.


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